While we already head a lot regarding specifications of the Fiji-based Radeon R9 Fury (non-X) graphics card, now these specifications are pretty much confirmed as two custom Sapphire Radeon R9 Fury graphics cards have leaked online.

Spotted by Videocardz.com, Sapphire will apparently launch at least two custom Radeon R9 Fury graphics cards, both equipped with Sapphire's well known triple-fan Tri-X cooler.

While the reference clock for the Radeon R9 Fury is probably set at 1000MHz, Sapphire's OC version of the Radeon R9 Fury will be running at 1040MHz, which does not sound like a big deal but also not a bad factory-overclock considering that Radeon R9 Fury is air-cooled.

The slides released alongside pictures of the Sapphire Radeon R9 Fury Tri-X also confirm that the Radeon R9 Fury will pack 56 Compute Units, or 3584 Stream Processors, as well as 4GB of High Bandwidth Memory clocked at 500MHz, something that we wrote about earlier.

According to the report and judging by the leaked pictures, it appears that Sapphire's Radeon R9 Fury will use the same reference PCB as the Fury X (board number C880) and also need two 8-pin PCI-Express power connectors as well as feature the GPU LED load indicator.

The Sapphire Radeon R9 Fury will also feature three DisplayPort 1.2 and one HDMI 1.4 display output.

According to the leaked slides, in addition to the Sapphire Tri-X cooler, the new Sapphire Radeon R9 Fury will also come with "an enhanched 6-phase power design for GPU VDDC" and also include a backplate. As you can see from the picture below, R9 Fury is still based on the same short PCB and looks quite strange with a large triple-fan Tri-X cooler which extends over the PCB.

As reported earlier, AMD Radeon R9 Fury is expected to launch on 14th of July and you can expect plenty of custom graphics cards from usual AMD AIB partners.

Based on AMD's Hawaii GPU with 2816 Stream Processors, the new Sapphire R9 290X 8GB Vapor-X graphics card is also a part of Sapphire's Overclocked Edition, which means that it will feature a factory-overclock which puts the GPU at 1030MHz while 8GB of GDDR5 memory paired up with a 512-bit memory interface ended up clocked at 1375MHz (5.5GHz effective).

Sapphire has decided to pair up the new 8GB Radeon R9 290X graphics card with its well known Vapor-X series cooler which features vapor chamber technology as well as the Tri-X structure with five heatpipes (10mm main, two 8mm and two 6mm) and three 90mm fans with two sets of dust repelling ball bearings and aerofoil section blades for maximum airflow and minimum noise. Sapphire also included a new feature called the PCB Component heat spreader which uses an additional heatsink mounted directly on an exposed part of copper PCB layer, which should reduce the temperature even further.

The new Sapphire R9 290X 8GB Vapor-X OC also features a custom PCB with 10-phase VRM with Direct-FET technology and Sapphire Black Diamond chokes. The new Sapphire R9 290X 8GB Vapor-X OC also comes with two DVI, HDMI 1.4a and Display Port outputs, making it perfect for three monitor Eyefinity setup, without the need for an active adapter, or recently popular 4K/UHD setups.

Unfortunately, Sapphire did not reveal any details regarding the price but did note that the new Sapphire R9 290X 8GB Vapor-X OC is currently shipping and should be showing up on retail/e-tail shelves. We have only managed to spot a non-OC version of Sapphire R9 290X Vapor-X Tri-X 8GB graphics card which is listed at around €670.

Sapphire has slapped its trademark Tri-X triple fan cooler on AMD’s latest Hawaii flagships, resulting in a couple of very interesting non-reference R9 290 series cards. Both cards feature the same cooler, dual BIOS and a factory overclock.

The R9 290X Tri-X boasts a GPU clock of up to 1040MHz, while the memory has been bumped up to 1300MHz. The reference clocks are 1000MHz/1250MHz, so the factory overclock is not that big, but hopefully the triple-fan cooler will allow for more overlocking headroom.

The wallet friendly R9 290 ended up with a similar overclock. The GPU clock is now 1000MHz, up from 947MHz, while the memory is clocked at 1300MHz, up from 1250MHz on reference cards. Depending on the retail price, it could be a very interesting alternative to the 290X, which is usually the case with AMD’s Pro versions of flagship products.

Sapphire says its Tri-X coolers employ fans with dust repelling bearings and aerofoil section blades to deliver highly efficient airflow at low noise levels. The fan cowling is designed to ensure the airflow is routed across the hottest areas of the card.

The actual retail price of the cards has not been announced yet. However, Sapphire says the cards are in production and they will be available soon. Specially packaged models with a Battlefield 4 promotion code will also be available.